Cycles of Influence - Music, Faith & Literature

Cycles of Influence - Music, Faith & Literature Lyrics

Just as classic rap lines are repeated decade after decade, so are classic pieces of literature. Literary references show up in other pieces of writing, of course, but they also pop up in other, more unlikely places. In fact, there are countless musical projects across multiple genres that re-tell classic works of literature, that reference specific lines, images, and scenes - even some that attempt to mirror the structure. What distinguishes a point of inspiration from a re-telling? An homage from a musical cover?

Sometimes the inspiration can be taken to a level of creation so large - or perhaps, so skewed - that the author himself cannot tolerate it. Take David Bowie for example, who attempted to write and design a never-produced stage musical based on George Orwell’s novel 1984. The concept album of music for the play, Diamond Dogs, was released but never made it to a theatrical production. The never-made play - David Bowie’s own vision of a post-apocalyptic and Orwell’s 1984 society - is unique in this discussion because its source of inspiration was the very foil to his production. Orwell’s estate denied the rights. Many other bands have taken on Orwell’s version of future society - and it’s downfall - including The Offspring’s “The Future is Now”, Muse’s “Resistance”, and The Eurhythmics’ “Sex Crime 1984”.

But it’s not just books, poems, short stories. The book most taken on in musical re-tellings is the book, the Bible. I would even go as far as to say you could treat biblical references as literary references because that’s how many musicians engage with the text - capitalizing on its storytelling aspect, engaging with larger religious themes through re-creating and re-telling.

Aerosmith’s “Adam’s Apple” is a rock retelling of the biblical story of Adam and Eve, with lines like:

Call me Ahab, what, monomaniac
Obsessed with success unlike Steve Wozniak
On the hunt for this mammal that once took my leg
With my worn-down crew and my man Queequeg
'You’re never going to find him!' He’s a big sperm whale
'The ocean is enormous!' Shut up, we’re setting sail
This scar that you see that runs down my face
Has scarred my soul and inspired this chase

What musical covers speak to you? Why does each medium of human expression end up in a tangled web of connection? With the rise of interdisciplinary explorations such as Rap Genius itself, we can begin to see each connection with more and more clarity. As the old saying goes, “No idea, no matter how good, is unique.” Now we can trace across which media a single idea, line, theme, image, or tone trips.